DHS Gets Public Comment, Whether It Wants It Or Not 228
OverTheGeicoE writes "The motion to force DHS to start its public comment period is still working its way through the court (DHS: 'We're not stonewalling!', EPIC: 'Yes, you are!'). While we wait for the decision, Cato Institute's Jim Harper points out another way for the public to comment on body scanners, tsacomment.com. Even before this site existed, of course, the government was receiving public comment anyway in the form of passenger complaint letters, which they buried in their files. Even so, the public can get a chance to view those comments as the result of Freedom of Information Act requests. An FOIA request about pat-downs by governmentattic.org yielded hundreds of pages of letters to the government from 2010, including frequent reports of pat-down induced PTSD and sexual abuse trauma."
Popular vote (Score:5, Insightful)
I believe I speak for many Americans when I say my comment is "Go away."
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You actually speak for a minority of Americans. Most people love the security theater.
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It would be better with free popcorn. Of course, you'd never get it on the plane.
Re:Popular vote (Score:5, Insightful)
The majority also supported the roundup of Japanese-americans during WW2, depriving them of their liberty, property, and right to a jury trial. That doesn't make the majority's trampeling of individual rights okay, either then or now.
Re:Popular vote (Score:4, Insightful)
The majority is often wrong. To see this, you only have to look to slavery, segregation, anti-semitism, the Iraq war, and Nazi politics among other things.
In times like this you need strong clear leadership from the few in power.
Re:Popular vote (Score:4, Insightful)
Only if you assume that the few in power are morally better than the majority. But since they're drawn from the same pool, and the process of obtaining power selects against the wise and the kind, you can be assured that they are not.
We do not give power to the majority because the majority is wise. We do so to dilute the influence of individual corruption. If a king rules in a way that only benefits the king, you can be assured that most of his subjects are suffering. If the majority rules in a way that only benefits the majority, then at least 50% of the people are happy.
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The majority also supported the roundup of Japanese-americans during WW2, depriving them of their liberty, property, and right to a jury trial. That doesn't make the majority's trampeling of individual rights okay, either then or now.
Does anybody here know why they were rounded up? I'm embarrassed to admit (as someone raised in Japan) that I thought the round-up was a simple knee-jerk reaction to Pearl Harbor. Rather, even our gullible, culturally-clueless 40's era forebears could obviously sense that there was something extremely different about culturally-homogenous Japanese society; even 2nd and 3rd-generation Japanese-Americans demonstrated that they weren't immune to its conditioning effect [wikipedia.org].
Re:Popular vote (Score:4, Informative)
While I completely agree that this was an outrage.
We didn't have any Japanese attacks on American soil after that happened.
So maybe it helped? Or maybe it was the huge war we waged on the Japanese after Pearl Harbor.
As they say, hindsight is 20/20.
Not true. In fact, fire balloon attacks almost took out the atomic bomb development here on the Pacific coast. There are other events, including the Aleutian islands and various events up and down the coast in the US.
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I blame the US educational system for not teaching me of this. Wonder if we can ever get around to really learning true history in the US.
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Comment removed (Score:5, Funny)
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Yes, imprisoning your own citizens prevents foreign powers from attacking. Riiiiight.
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Yes, imprisoning your own citizens prevents foreign powers from attacking. Riiiiight.
Can you believe some of these people don't drown when it rains??
Re:Popular vote (Score:5, Interesting)
We didn't have any Japanese attacks on American soil after that happened.
Not true. "On the nights of June 21 and 22, 1942, a Japanese submarine fired 17 shells at Fort Stevens, making it the only military installation in the continental United States to receive hostile fire during World War II (the oil fields in Santa Barbara, California that were also shelled by the Japanese, was not considered a military installation)." Santa Barbara could be said to happen before, but the Fort Stevens attack happened after.
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The US has been pretty damn fortunate to be able to fight its wars on other peoples' land. It distorts the perspective, if you think about it. Ask an 80-year-old Russian about the Great Patriotic War. Ask my mom about hiding in the woods as B-29s burned her home town to the ground.
I wonder sometimes if our eagerness to slap leather and come out blazing has something to do with the fact that we won't have to clean up our own damage when the shooting is done. "Collateral damage" is easier to tolerate as long
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Re:Popular vote (Score:5, Insightful)
There was recent poll (on CNN I believe), that claimed people in general were satisfied with the TSA (note that some of them dont fly at all, and have never experienced the TSA, but decided to vote)
Re:Popular vote (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Popular vote (Score:4, Funny)
Don't call me Shirley.
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Re:Popular vote (Score:4, Informative)
It's at least a MAGIC rock.
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*thinks for a minute*
Lisa, I want to buy your rock.
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Re:Popular vote or the severe lack of tigers (Score:5, Funny)
Why do you say they are ignorant? TSA is responsible for making sure that terrorists don't crash airplanes into our office buildings and work places. You don't have to fly to know that there haven't been any planes flown into office buildings in some time in the US. Now, I do fly a few times a year - and the security theater is pathetic. I'm about to fly again in two weeks and am not looking forward to it. However from the point of view of "average person who doesn't fly" - why would they not be satisfied that someone seems to be keeping planes from falling from the sky? It might be the same in principle as the old "tiger preventing rock", but to them it must be working.
Actually, I have this whistle that keeps Seattle safe from tigers.
Works fairly well for lions too, but not so great for bears.
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But just to be safe, I want to buy your rock.
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Coming INTO the airport is way different than trying to go OUT of it. In the States it is actually illegal to go half-way through security then change your mind and leave. It's illegal to argue with the TSA. Your luggage will be taken from you into another room (out of sight) and then you are interrogated if your luggage has, at any point, been out of your sight. There have been multiple cases of TSA agents stealing stuff from luggage. Let's not even discuss broken colostomy bags, forced ingestion of b
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That you don't fly doesn't make you ignorant of the subject. In fact if you don't fly you are far more likely (assuming you are a selfish prick) to support ridiculous security routines for flying. After all they don't affect you, but a plane crashing into your office certainly does. Now you might want them to spend the money on more effective measures that are more likely to reduce yor chances of said plane crashing into you, of course.
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There was recent poll (on CNN I believe), that claimed people in general were satisfied with the TSA (note that some of them dont fly at all, and have never experienced the TSA, but decided to vote)
I also heard that people lobbying against gun rights in America don't own any guns themselves...
Re:Popular vote (Score:5, Interesting)
I love America, actually. Not overly fond of Americans (the stereotypical kind, not the real ones), nor the politics, but as a country it's actually quite nice.
I still don't travel there, though. I used to. A lot. But I haven't flown through US airspace since the TSA started with the whole backscatter x-ray system and gropings. I've read far too many stories about things they've missed (remember Adam Savage's discussion about how they missed a 12" saw blade?), and it doesn't take a civil rights activist to decide that being forced to allow a high school dropout to look at a naked picture of you to get on a plane is an invasion of privacy. I won't even drive to the US, even though large parts of the eastern seaboard are within a day's drive of here, because I've heard about them thinking of installing those machines at land crossings and ports of entry, too. It's not a lot of money they've lost from me, but I know a fairly large number of people who live outside the US who won't touch it with a 10-foot pole any more... you have to wonder how badly this is impacting the US tourism industry. *gasp* perish the thought, but I'm spending the same money I used to spend in the US in Cuba or Mexico instead....
There was a time when the TSA actually tried doing things in a sane way. I've had dealings with them at airports before they started with the backscatter x-ray nonsense, and most of the officers I dealt with seemed genuinely interested in doing a good job making things safer. Admittedly, the last time I dealt with them was at the airport in Dayton, OH, but my experiences with them at airports like Dayton, or Bangor, ME, or smaller airports like that was actually pretty good. I have to wonder if the people who think, generally, that they're doing a good job today are basing that opinion on experiences like mine, which were both many years ago, and at airports that were small enough to be able to actually hire good people. I don't think, now, that they're doing a good job, but they used to give the impression that they were.... if you still hold on to that opinion of them, you must not be reading the same news that the rest of us are.
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Agree on smaller airports. But the TSA farce at larger airports like SEA and SFO just makes me end up driving instead.
When I add in the time spent in stupid security lines that don't even stop 1/5th of terrorist attack tests, I just fail to see the point. The Security Theater does not make us safer, and as a former Army Sgt with counter-terrorism and explosives experience, it drives me batty what a waste and insanity it all is.
Just for fun I like to sneak a few items on board each time I fly that shouldn't
Re:Popular vote (Score:5, Insightful)
Many yes, but far too many feel that "If that's the price we have to pay for safety, then so be it".
Which of course has SO much wrong with it.
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The SA wouldn't be so bad if they just operated in airports (which was the 9/11 attack originated), but they are expanding their domain to other areas. Buses. Train stations. Malls, post offices, social security centers, public parks, GOP and DNC conventions. Also along highways in the 100-mile border zone and in Tennessee.
"He has erected a multitude of New Offices, and sent hither swarms of Officers to harass our people and eat out their substance..... He has affected to render the Military independent
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I was flipping through the channels a couple nights ago and came across a Piers Morgan Tonight show (there was a guest host) with three or four women on the panel and they happen to be discussing airport security. And 3 of the 4 of them outright said, "But this is what is required to keep us safe, therefore I full support having to take my shoes off etc.."
I sat there a bit taken back realizing that probably this really is the view that most people probably hold. I'm not sure why I expected any different.
A
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Many yes, but far too many feel that "If that's the price we have to pay for safety, then so be it".
Not [utsandiego.com] as [vagabondish.com] many [smartmoney.com] as [huffingtonpost.com] people [forbes.com] think [boardingarea.com].
It's all in how the survey question is stated. If you ask people "Do you support airport security?" you'll find overwhelming support. Obviously. Ask people if they support the TSA irradiating its citizens, "raping" them with invasive pat-downs -- whether they agree with those security procedures, and you'll get much lower response. It's like the IRS: Most people acknowledge they have to pay their taxes. Few agree with the collection tactics the IRS uses, or the lack of judicial
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Tinfoil mode off: Is that actually true, or are these just the people they show on TV whenever a camera shows up?
>
It's true. Just read the comments in the rest of this thread...
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Unfortunately, you don't speak for enough. Overall satisfaction rates with the TSA are near supermajority levels. The DHS and TSA aren't going away in spite of their overt orwellian qualities.
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Most people on Slashdot are either too young to get the reference, or would get the reference without needing it to be credited like you.... I'm guessing they didn't put you in Group W, then? ;)
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Nicely Done.
A little help ... (Score:5, Funny)
DHS = Department of Homeland Security
FOIA = Freedom of Information Act
PTSD = Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder
EPIC = The most overused word ever, next to fail. for even more asshole points, use them together to form "epic fail." (quoted from Urban Dictionary)
Re:A little help ... (Score:5, Informative)
Or, you know, the Electronic Privacy Information Center [epic.org].
Just saying.
They've been around since '94, before 'epic' became such an overused word.
Re:A little help ... (Score:5, Funny)
So in other words, they were EPIC before EPIC was EPIC.
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Close: EPIC was EPIC before EPIC was EPIC.
What good is public comment (Score:5, Insightful)
when your comments are completely ignored?
Re:What good is public comment (Score:5, Interesting)
What good is public comment when 90% of the country disagrees with you and thinks that the TSA is legitimate protection?
Does our collective five-year-old psyche want its' security blanket? Yes.
Unfortunate? Yes.
Can we educate people that the TSA is an ineffective waste of money? No.
We haven't even succeeded in teaching Kansas that Gorillas and Humans share a similar genealogical lineage.
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gov should protect us and our rights from the ignorant masses...not pander to them.
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While I agree with your premise, that's unfortunately not the way that modern US politics works.
Most people get elected just like they did for junior high school class president -- "Let's have a soda machine in the cafeteria!!"
Re:What good is public comment (Score:5, Interesting)
Let's have two classes of airline - one with TSA fully funded from ticket fees and another that has no TSA and standard security. Let the market decide.
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What you're suggesting is two classes of airlines, two sets of airport infrastructure, two sets of bureaucratic security policies, and the 90% being ok with the other class of airline flying over their country/buildings. I'm sure the ticket price for the unsecured airlines would be much more expensive because it would need to subsidize all of that additional infrastructure.
"Democracy is two wolves and a sheep voting on what to have for dinner."
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Nah, most airports can be divided up without that, and it's not like we're doubling the capacity. If you want TSA security, flights are leaving on concourse A and B, otherwise, C and D.
As soon as the typical traveler sees the TSA surcharge, they'll likely be fine with 'non groping'.
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Let's have two classes of airline - one with TSA fully funded from ticket fees and another that has no TSA and standard security. Let the market decide.
This! For the love of God, This!
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That would not be enough. What about people who dont fly, and are afraid of planes falling from skies into their office buildings and apartments. We need to divide the country's airspace into two. One in which TSA vetted planes fly, and another in which unvetted planes fly. People are free to live under either of the airspace.
PS: How many do you think will live under either of the airspaces?
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We haven't even succeeded in teaching Kansas that Gorillas and Humans share a similar genealogical lineage.
They do? **gasp** If I were a gorilla, I would be incensed! Get your filthy hands off me! Dirty Human!
Re:What good is public comment (Score:4, Insightful)
It provides the illusion of legitimate democracy while actually effecting nothing, thus keeping the herd *quiet*
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I am not so cynical or conspiratorial to think that the gubmint has become completely insensitive to the wishes of its polity.
Why not? Convince me that this is anything but wishful thinking. Please.
nice bias. (Score:4, Informative)
" which they buried in their files"
If by that you mean kept on hand to refer to latter in order to properly respond and maintain a history, then correct.
Re:nice bias. (Score:5, Funny)
Yes, they were readily available for public inspection in the bottom of a locked filing cabinet stuck in a disused lavatory with a sign on the door saying "Beware of The Leopard".
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It took a FOIA request to get them out into the open. Hardly what you expect from something the government is actively going to do something about.
This is going to get ugly (Score:5, Interesting)
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Well yeah observation techniques can be thwarted in a pretty obvious way.... don't have any behavioral tells showing and you will get through. They have training for that sort of thing you know.
They have Xanax for that kind of thing, too.
Re:This is going to get ugly (Score:5, Interesting)
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And?!?
If someone is going to put that level of time and effort into obtaining a goal, chances are they are going to beat any system. Invasive pat downs, luggage screening, limiting liquid volume etc. aren't going to thwart any but, the unprepared. A well trained screener has about the same chance to stop someone and is faster, friendlier and has no interest in touching my genitals.
I cringe every time I hear someone say "well it's for our safety" or something to that effect.
Re:This is going to get ugly (Score:5, Insightful)
They don't have to beat the TSA. They can blow themselves up in the queue for the scanner and have pretty much the same effect.
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Or at the elementary school which looks like a much softer target all of a sudden. Or the mall... or a big rally...
Thats really the problem with it... best case scenario, if everything the TSA does works flawlessly with no way to be exploited.... even if I could put my head into such a pure fantasyland
Then their best case "win" scenario is exactly that, terrorist planners scratch airports off their target list, and move on to a different target, leaving the TSA to implement their perfect security for no rea
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Not much you can do about someone doing something stupid anywhere in the terminal. Airline security is more about preventing people from doing it 25000 feet in the air, where the chances of survival are practically nil. Targeted questioning by professional lie detectors is very effective in preventing this. X-ray machines, metal detectors, and body scanners/pat downs are not nearly as effective even as a deterrent.
What the current TSA procedures absolutely don't prevent is hijackers taking the the plane and
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On one hand, I understand their ham handed approach to national security after 9/11. It was like a fire department flooding a property to make sure the fire was out. People had and will have good justification for ridiculing their blunt instrument approach to airport security -- especially the randomness of it all. On the other hand, we have intelligent people with experience enough to know that x-ray devices and bag searches only give the illusion of security. While on a much smaller scale, look at what the Israeli's do. A very well trained security person looks deeply into your eyes and questions you. That's it. That's all it takes to give the green light or send up a red flag. And, when was the last time you heard about a hijacking in Israel? Screening passengers by observation techniques can't be thwarted, while technological safeguards can always be overcome.
As a Jew and married to an Israeli, I have a lot of firsthand knowledge about flying thru Ben-Gurion airport, and I agree 100% with the comments about Israeli security. Unfortunately, in the US that kind of security is called "profiling", and objected to even though we - rightly or wrongly - profile EVERYONE we come into contact with: it is called "first impression". Personally I think it is fine to profile people as one tool, but NOT OK to use that to discriminate against them.
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What's your explanation for private companies running airline travel as a matter of national security? If the airlines can't keep bombs off their planes, then they go out of business and/or prosecuted for the actions of the terrorists they let through. How about life in prison for the entire board of directors of American Airlines?
Enhanced Pat Down (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Enhanced Pat Down (Score:4, Interesting)
I've had the "pat down", which was far from it's name -- it's much closer to a "rub up". I didn't like it -- few people have rubbed their fingers around my scrotum, and I certainly wasn't expecting the TSA screener to when I "consented" to the search.
However, not being an American, and being on my way out of the country, I had no choice.
I didn't bother writing a letter. Should I? (Would a letter from a British person be ignored?) If so, where to?
(In Europe, the most invasive search I've had is literally a "patting down" of clothing to look for concealed weapons, or else having the metal detecting wand waved over me. Although normally I walk straight through having not set off the metal detector.)
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Should I? (Would a letter from a British person be ignored?) If so, where to?
It's likely that all letters will be ignored, but it never hurts. If enough people write to make them believe it will cost tourism dollars it might make a difference, try the ambassador. You could also try your own government - part of the reason the US gets away with it is because other governments are going along with the whole theater experience, if the British government were to issue a travel warning against going to the United States it would get noticed at least. There have been other countries who h
Re:Enhanced Pat Down (Score:5, Insightful)
Maybe not then, but you do now.
My choice is not to visit the US. At the moment, their airport security there isn't something I'm willing to subject myself to.
I've been lightly frisked elsewhere (politely, and not overly invasive), which is fine because I refuse to get into that scanner thing. But compared to what I've heard of the idiocy with TSA ... not happening.
Ever since Alberto Gonzales said habeus corpus [wikipedia.org] isn't actually guaranteed, there's been a fairly obvious conclusion that pesky things like the US Constitution just get in the way. (How an Attorney General can have no idea how your laws work still baffles me.)
And since now apparently there's a huge Constitution Free Zone [aclu.org] ... if it doesn't apply to citizens, I sure as hell don't want to be a foreign national.
Sadly, 9/11 was when America jumped the shark in terms of her historical defense of rights.
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I was really looking forward to being fondled and groped, but the TSA screeners were so uncomfortable, that they probably weren't able to determine definitively that I was male, much less if I were carrying something dangerous, like a comb or a camera. The dudes didn't want to touch me or look at me!
Yep, the best way to keep your pat down short is to look like you are enjoying it.
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Yep, the best way to keep your pat down short is to look like you are enjoying it.
This seems like a good opportunity for Viagra to reach a new market. "Viagra: make flying more enjoyable."
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I was really looking forward to being fondled and groped, but the TSA screeners were so uncomfortable, that they probably weren't able to determine definitively that I was male, much less if I were carrying something dangerous, like a comb or a camera. The dudes didn't want to touch me or look at me!
Exactly how gross are you?
There are much better ways to spend money (Score:4, Interesting)
And when you can get away with ignoring a court order, isn't that a symptom of a larger problem?
Re:There are much better ways to spend money (Score:4, Insightful)
If a simple pat-down "induced PTSD and sexual abuse trauma", it is more likely to suggest a problem with the passenger rather than the TSA.
So it is the passenger's fault they have issues being groped?
Passengers that have been sexually abused have had issues with the TSA groping reviving trauma from the initial attack. That is kinda what PTSD does to a person.
I know, I know, it is hard for anyone on Slashdot to imagine being the subject of unwanted sexual attention, but these things do happen.
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I'm just about as anti-TSA as someone can get, and I have to say that as awkward and unsettling as having a stranger shove their hand in your crotch? That should not cause trauma to any mentally healthy, well-adjusted individual. It is not any more sexual than having a doctor or nurse probe your junk (unless you're into that kind of thing I guess?) and it's not like you didn't know it was coming.
Small children and people with existing traumas are something else, of course, but the TSA doesn't have any syste
Re:There are much better ways to spend money (Score:5, Insightful)
it's not like you didn't know it was coming.
Ahhh, the justification that makes everything the TSA does A-OK.
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You have obviously never been raped.
"Small children and people with existing traumas are something else, of course"
Ahhh, the justification that makes everything the TSA does A-OK.
No, no it does not. The practice and the TSA at large are complete bullshit and not justifiable by any means that I can see. But it does not lead to trauma in an otherwise mentally healthy individual either.
=Smidge=
Re:There are much better ways to spend money (Score:4, Insightful)
people with existing traumas are something else, of course, but the TSA doesn't have any systems to deal with that properly
That's the case that people are talking about. And the TSA does have the system to deal with it properly. It's called respect our civil rights and don't search people without a warrant or probable cause.
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That should not cause trauma to any mentally healthy, well-adjusted individual.
Based on your statement, there is an implied assumption that only mentally healthy, well adjusted people should travel (or be allowed to travel). I do not think that this is what you intended to say.
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How would you like to get a crotch exam every time you walked into a government building? Or a 7-11? I mean, terrorists could be anywhere, right?
I would not appreciate it one bit, but I don't think it'd be traumatized by it if I knew it would happen ahead of time.
I'd probably be more traumatized by shopping at a 7-11 in the first place.
The doctor touches your junk as part of a medical exam to ensure you're healthy. This is something you opt in for, because it benefits you. Having some stranger with no medical training shove his hands down my pants is unwelcome and invasive, and is of absolutely no benefit to my mental or physical health.
I agree that there is no benefit to what the TSA does, but it is ostensibly done for the purpose of benefiting your health by increasing safety. I don't think it accomplishes this, but that's what the given reason is.
To go back to the doctor analogy, if the doctor says he needs to fondle your crotch when there is no a
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Simple pat-downs have not been used for quite a while now. TSA now uses enhanced pat-downs.
Anxiety (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Anxiety (Score:5, Insightful)
but living under that fear should not be a necessity of a reasonably safe flying experience
There is no evidence at all that you are any safer. In fact the TSA has failed to detect smuggled banned objects in every official test, several unofficial tests, and several anecdotal accounts that I'm aware of - and there have been numerous publications on how the various methods they use are easily fooled and/or don't detect the proper types of materials.
You are living in fear and you're not even safer for your trouble.
=Smidge=
DHS' existence makes the case for states rights (Score:5, Insightful)
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...over federal power. If you give the federal government too much power, they do things like this. They are simply not equipped (due mostly to incompetence) to deal with the concerns of it's citizens like local government is, and they should only exist to settle disputes between states and provide for the common defense and law. But when you put them in charge of things like this, you are guaranteed to get problems. The DHS is literally the poster child for why you should never ever ever give your executive branch in a representative republic more power than you would give your local mayor.
I don't see how giving regions, states, or municipalities this kind of responsibility or authority rather than the federal government is a solution to this sort of problem. Government at any level can be abusive and unresponsive. I read just yesterday in the local paper that the citizens of a nearby suburb are complaining that their city council is out of touch with the residents over a zoning change they made without addressing the neighbors' concerns. This is a city of 185 people. The peoples' recourse?
Re:DHS' existence makes the case for states rights (Score:5, Insightful)
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Yes. and if you talk to your local mayor, your local chief of police, your local council members...you'll get an actual response. At least I always have. Shit you send them an email and you get a clear, concise answer to exactly the issue you asked or complained about.
Try getting that from a anyone in the federal government. Sure, you can go talk to them. I've talked to my state senator many times. Last time he told me 'yes, I'm definitely going to vote against this bill, it's a solution in search of a prob
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Well, I'm going to argue that both you and the AC are missing the point. I'm not suggesting that if someone doesn't like something about where they live that they should just move. Far from it, so try to be a little less sensitive to perceived insult. What I talking about is a person who has for whatever reason found themselves in an unsympathetic conflict with the government and all other avenues of recourse have failed. In that situation the difference between local government and and the government o
communists won (Score:5, Insightful)
Remember what the TSA really is: a jobs program (Score:2)
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I imagine the issue being heterosexual women getting groped by jackboots.
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I've generally just seen it as a suggestion that inspectors should all be female, preferably attractive. Straight guys would enjoy it, gay guys and girls would be less creeped. I don't really see anything wrong with that plan, other than maybe complaints about discrimination. :p